July 10th
There is something to be said about lessons learned
when we push ourselves out of our comfort zone. I can’t blame myself for not
wanting to go to South Carolina and feeling uncomfortable about the trip. Here’s
how I hear it in my head when the Gods were planning my trip: let’s take a
healthy young lady, give her breast cancer, oh yeah, let’s make sure she’s 6
months pregnant too. Then, let’s send her on a trip. But make her go with a 2
year boy who is half cheetah, half lunatic. Let’s make her trip long, like a
few 4 hour flights, then a really long layover in between the flights. I think
we’re taking it too easy on her…what could we do that would really bring her to
her knees? Got it! Let’s make sure she can’t drink any alcohol or sit near her
sister on the plane. I’m not dramatic. I’m not dramatic. I’m not dramatic. The
lesson learned, as you will read over the next few blogs is that something
absolutely incredible happens to me on this trip. Yes, this trip that I so
eloquently described as a ball full of fun earlier. Going out of my comfort
zone provided me with a pivotal moment that I will never, ever forget and that
I will forever be grateful for. I can’t wait to write about it. But, it’s not
in today’s blog. SORRY!
I flew to South Carolina today. Marco was unbelievably
good on the plane. It’s been a very long day and I am drained. We left at
6:00AM and arrived in Aiken, after driving for an hour after we landed around
9:00pm. Marco has been a serious trooper, entertaining everyone with songs
about “Papa’s beer” and other interesting creations. I’m tired, edgy and just
want to sleep. There were numerous times where I started panicking on the plane
and I felt like I was going to explode. I know at some point a public meltdown
is going to happen and I am trying my best to avoid it. I don’t know what
exactly won’t let me put my guard down around people, but once I get around
people I refuse to let on what’s truly going on. The panic attacks still
happen, the constant outbreaks of sweat- especially in my left armpit (WHY?)
and all these jumbled up emotions, but I repress all of it once I leave my
house and am in public. As I was sitting on the plane, Marco was asleep and I
started to write in my journal. Just starting to write, I could feel the vomit creep up my throat, I
start sweating and shaking. A fucking full blown panic attack starts. I look
back and my sister and mom are sleeping. I look next to me and Marco is asleep.
I look across from me and Maddie and Jack (my niece and nephew) are watching a
movie. I NEED SOMEONE TO HELP ME! I am just getting ready to lose it, tears
fill my eyes and some person in front of me turns around and glances at me.
That one glance, thank god, snaps me out of it and I smile at them. They smile back
and I am saved by the bell. Now, if only a less bloated younger Mark Paul
Gosselar was sitting near me…It’s hard to explain, but I have no idea what is
going to happen if I melt down in public, which is why I’m scared. I think it’s
because I won’t be able to control it and I don’t want to answer a bunch of
questions or to have people feel sorry for me.
When we arrive in Aiken all the kids plug in and
recharge their batteries I’m not talking technology here. Marco goes into full
blown crazy mode and when this happens there is no off switch. Everyone is
drinking, hugging and laughing. I am watching everyone else’s vacation start
and I just want to sleep. I am the luckiest one on this trip because I get the
pleasure of staying sober and sharing a room with a 2 year old, 9 year old and
12 year old. It’s almost midnight. I am in a really pleasant mood with each
second that ticks by with no sign of nighty nighty time yet. These kids are
prime college student party candidates and I am the old cranky lady that calls
the police on their house party because it’s interrupting my Murder She Wrote. By
this point I almost use every offensive word I can think of to make these kids
go to bed, because everyone knows that cussing and yelling makes kids sleep.
Before “cuss fest 2015” erupts, Marco comes and lays with me. He curls up and
tells me I am his best buddy. My first reaction is to start crying out of guilt
because of all the bad words I was associating with him in my head, then I just
start laughing because this is what makes a 2 year old awesome. I close my eyes
and wake up in the morning to Marco wrapped around my neck like a cat. I don’t
recall having any nightmares but my sheets are soaked in sweat and my whole
body is tense and sore. All I want to do is go home.